trying to repair my daughters night light

hey everyone first post here, still learning about circuit boards. I'm after a bit of help repairing my daughters night light. 3 of the 9 LEDS are flickering when its on.

the labelled LEDs 1-3 are the green ones which are flickering.

the one the screwdriver is pointing to is LED 1.
the other LEDs are Red and Blue. they all work fine but the Green flickers or sometimes doesn't even work. the power comes to that board from another board which just has some caps and resistors on it. if needed i can put up a picture of it. but I'm almost certain that isn't at fault.

@me217
Touch a soldering iron to the two solder pads of the Green LED and the 0 (zero) ohm resistor next to it. Then touch the soldering iron to the three pads of the transistor Q1 which controls the green LED.

@me217
Touch a soldering iron to the two solder pads of the Green LED and the 0 (zero) ohm resistor next to it. Then touch the soldering iron to the three pads of the transistor Q1 which controls the green LED.

just gave it a shot. no luck, i also forgot to mention that the numbers are the order from worst to best as far as flicker goes. number 1 flickers quite badly two not as much and 3 not much at all.

EDIT: i was wondering if its a voltage drop. also they don't seem to flicker until they hit full brightness, as they fade on and off in sequence. i have heard that different coloured LEDs require more power then others. Would green require more then red and blue.

well its "fixed" now. and i use that term very loosely. i rewired it so it just stays on solid blue. i got a feeling that the transistor right near the power input is faulty. after cooking it. as it flickers on and that's it. ah well. win some you lose some. thanks everyone for the advise

The advertised product most likely will pulse LEDs
Even some USB output converters can be hacked. For more than 5v !
Without the usb socket these are small.

But they cant do 40v or 60v. Its about the limit what is safe, like the voltage used for the analog telephone system.

For real illumination you need a larger solar cell and probably a lithium battery. These solar lights from shops are just dots, and the cheap ones will suffer from rusting after a short time. Theres a lot of trash in the shops..

just gave it a shot. no luck, i also forgot to mention that the numbers are the order from worst to best as far as flicker goes. number 1 flickers quite badly two not as much and 3 not much at all.

EDIT: i was wondering if its a voltage drop. also they don't seem to flicker until they hit full brightness, as they fade on and off in sequence. i have heard that different coloured LEDs require more power then others. Would green require more then red and blue.